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George Devine
George Devine
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George Alexander Cassady Devine CBE (20 November 1910 – 20 January 1966) was an English theatrical manager, director, teacher, and actor based in London from the early 1930s until his death. He also worked in TV and film.

Key Information

Early life and education

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Devine was born in Hendon, London to Georgios Devine (son of an Irish father and a Greek mother) and a Canadian mother, Ruth Eleanor Cassady (from Vancouver).[1][2] His father was a clerk in Martins Bank.[3]

Ruth Devine became mentally unstable after her son's birth,[4] and his parents' marriage, deeply unhappy throughout his early childhood, had broken down by the time he was in his early teens. Around this time he was sent to Clayesmore School, an independent boys' boarding school founded by his uncle Alexander "Lex" Devine, who took his nephew under his wing hoping that he would take over the running of the school.[5] In 1929, Devine went to Oxford University to read for a degree in history at Wadham College.[6]

It was at Oxford that his interest in theatre, which had begun at school, came to fruition, and in 1931 he became president of the prestigious Oxford University Dramatic Society, or OUDS.[7] In early 1932, he invited the young actor John Gielgud to direct a production of Romeo and Juliet and, as the OUDS did not admit women, invited Peggy Ashcroft and Edith Evans to play Juliet and the Nurse.[8] Gielgud insisted on having the costumes designed by Motley, a newly formed theatre-design team consisting of sisters Sophie and Margaret Harris as well as Elizabeth Montgomery.[9]

The great success of the production encouraged Devine to abandon his degree before sitting his finals and move to London to begin an acting career.[10] He also worked for Motley as their business manager.[2]

Pre-war years

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Although Devine managed to get some work as an actor, both at the Old Vic and for John Gielgud (whose directing career had taken off after the OUDS Romeo and Juliet), he was initially not a great success.[11] Rather overweight, dark and foreign-looking, he did not fit the conventional stereotype and tended to play relatively small character parts.[12] Always interested in France (he spoke the language perfectly) and in French theatre, he suggested to Gielgud that they should invite the French director Michel Saint-Denis to London in 1935 to direct a version of his successful production of Andre Obey's Noé.[13]

This proved to be the beginning of a close and fruitful partnership between the two men. Saint-Denis remained in London and, together with Devine and their friends Marius Goring and Glen Byam Shaw, founded the London Theatre Studio in 1936,[14] which offered training not only to actors and directors but also to stage designers. Run by Motley, this was the first course in Britain to offer training in set and costume design. Jocelyn Herbert, who was later to become part of Devine's life, was a student on the course.[15]

At the end of the 1930s Devine finally got the chance to direct a play himself. His first professional production was an adaptation by Alec Guinness of Charles Dickens' novel Great Expectations, which played at the Queen's Theatre in 1939, with Guinness as Herbert Pocket and Martita Hunt as Miss Havisham; David Lean saw this and later acknowledged that it "exerted a tremendous influence" on his celebrated 1946 film.[16][17] Devine also directed a successful production of a stage version of Daphne du Maurier's Rebecca at the Queen's Theatre in 1939.[18]

Wartime

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When the Second World War broke out in September 1939, Devine did not initially expect to be called up, owing to a supposedly weak heart. He did, however, pass his army medical and went into basic training with the Royal Artillery at the end of 1941.[19] After a period of relative inactivity in India, he was transferred to Burma where he spent the final part of the war engaged in jungle warfare. He attained the rank of captain and was twice mentioned in despatches.[20]

Post-war years and Old Vic Theatre School

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Devine returned to England in 1946, and in September of that year appeared as George Antrobus in Laurence Olivier's production of Thornton Wilder's The Skin of Our Teeth, also starring Vivien Leigh, at the Piccadilly Theatre in London. Soon afterwards, together with Saint-Denis and Byam Shaw, and under the auspices of the Old Vic, he opened the Old Vic Theatre School in Thurlow Park Road, Dulwich, London, to continue the training courses begun at the London Theatre Studio before the war. At the same time he formed the Young Vic Theatre Company, which was intended to bring theatre to young people. The school ran successfully for several years, training actors such as Prunella Scales, Joan Plowright and Patrick Wymark.[citation needed]

In 1952, the three directors were forced to resign following a dispute with the Old Vic governors, and Devine embarked on a free-lance career as a director and actor.[2] Byam Shaw had moved to Stratford-upon-Avon to run the Shakespeare Memorial Theatre, and Devine directed several successful Shakespeare productions there in the early 1950s, including a notorious version of King Lear (1955), which starred John Gielgud and was designed by the experimental Japanese American artist and sculptor Isamu Noguchi.[21] He also directed several operas at Sadler's Wells Theatre in London,[2] and appeared in several films.

Royal Court Theatre

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In 1952 the young director Tony Richardson cast Devine in a television adaptation of "Curtain Down", a short story by Anton Chekhov.[22] There soon developed what Devine came to call their "great friendship". Not long afterwards, together with Richardson's friend and partner the American sociologist George Goetschius, they formed a plan for a radical new theatre company,[23] the objective of which, as Devine wrote later, "was to get writers, writers of serious pretensions, back into the theatre", and thus to make the theatre "part of the intellectual life of the country".[24] The fulfilment of these goals led to the formation in 1955 of what was called the English Stage Company. They acquired the rental of the Royal Court Theatre in Sloane Square, London, and Devine placed an advertisement in the Stage asking for new plays.[25] The Royal Court opened in April 1956 with a production of Angus Wilson's play The Mulberry Bush, followed by Arthur Miller's The Crucible, in which Devine played Governor Danforth as well as directing.[26] It was not until the third production, John Osborne's Look Back in Anger, that the theatre really attracted public attention. Although the play was badly reviewed by traditional theatre critics such as Milton Shulman and Philip Hope-Wallace, glowing reviews from the two Sunday critics Kenneth Tynan and Harold Hobson ensured that the play eventually became a hit.[27]

Under Devine's direction the English Stage Company remained primarily a writers' theatre, nurturing new talents such as Arnold Wesker, Ann Jellicoe, Edward Bond, Donald Howarth, Keith Johnstone, and many others. Devine's policy of taking on young directors as assistants produced some notable talents including William Gaskill, John Dexter, Lindsay Anderson, Anthony Page, and Peter Gill. Devine was also interested in continental drama. He staged several plays by Eugène Ionesco, including a celebrated production of The Chairs, in which he appeared with Joan Plowright.[28] He also greatly admired Samuel Beckett, several of whose plays were produced at the Royal Court, including Endgame in which Devine played Hamm.[29]

Several more of John Osborne's plays were staged at the Royal Court and George Devine appeared in one, the historical drama A Patriot for Me, when he suffered a second heart attack followed soon afterwards by a stroke that eventually led to his death at the age of 55.[30] He had begun to draft an autobiography, which included these words:

I was not strictly after a popular theatre à la Joan Littlewood-Roger Planchon, but a theatre that would be part of the intellectual life of the country. In this respect I consider I utterly failed. I feel I have the right to talk in this proprietary way about the English Stage Company to which I gave nine years of my life and nearly died in the tenth. I was convinced the way to achieve my objective was to get writers, writers of serious pretensions, back into the theatre. This I set out to do. I wanted to change the attitude of the public towards the theatre. All I did was to change the attitude of the theatre towards the public.[30]

Personal life and death

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Following their meeting in 1932, Devine and Sophie Harris formed a relationship, and he moved in with her in London after he left Oxford. They married in October 1939,[31] and their daughter Harriet was born in September 1942, after Devine had embarked for India. The marriage ended in the late 1950s, when Devine began living with Jocelyn Herbert, with whom he remained until his death.[32]

He was awarded the CBE in 1958.[33][2] Devine was appearing in A Patriot for Me when he suffered the heart attack that led to his death on 20 January 1966 at age 55.[34]

Legacy

[edit]

The George Devine Award for Most Promising Playwright is named in his honour.[35]

Filmography

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Year Title Role Notes
1939 The Silent Battle Sonneman
1952 The Card Mr. H. Calvert
1953 The Beggar's Opera Peachum
1954 The Million Pound Note Chop House Proprietor
1957 Time Without Pity Barnes – the Editor
1959 Look Back in Anger Doctor
1963 Tom Jones Squire Allworthy

Notes and references

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Further reading

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[edit]
Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
George Devine (20 November 1910 – 20 January 1966) was a British theatre director, manager, and actor known for his transformative leadership as the founding artistic director of the English Stage Company at the Royal Court Theatre from 1956 to 1965. He played a pivotal role in revitalizing post-war British theatre by championing new writing and staging groundbreaking plays that addressed contemporary social issues, most notably overseeing the premiere of John Osborne's Look Back in Anger in 1956, which is widely regarded as a landmark that ushered in the era of the "Angry Young Men." His commitment to artistic innovation and support for emerging playwrights helped establish the Royal Court as one of the most influential venues in modern British drama. Devine began his career as an actor after training at the Old Vic School, appearing in numerous stage productions and occasional film roles before shifting focus to directing and producing. He co-founded the English Stage Company with the aim of presenting contemporary work and encouraging experimental theatre, producing and directing works by writers such as Arnold Wesker, N. F. Simpson, and Samuel Beckett. His vision prioritized artistic integrity over commercial success, fostering an environment that nurtured bold and challenging drama during a period of significant cultural change in Britain. Throughout his tenure, Devine also contributed to theatre education and design, collaborating closely with his wife, the influential stage designer Jocelyn Herbert, on many productions. His legacy endures through the continued emphasis on new writing at the Royal Court and his impact on generations of British theatre practitioners.

Early life and education

Family background and childhood

George Devine was born George Alexander Cassady Devine on 20 November 1910 in Hendon, London, to Giorgios Devine and Ruth Eleanor Cassady. His father was half-Greek and half-Irish and worked as a bank clerk, while his mother was of Irish-Canadian origin. Ruth Devine experienced mental health issues following her son's birth. The parents' marriage was unhappy and broke down during his early teens. In 1919, at the age of nine, Devine was sent to Clayesmore School, an independent boarding school founded by his uncle Alexander "Lex" Devine, where he completed his schooling.

University years and Oxford theatre

George Devine matriculated at Wadham College, Oxford, in 1929, where he studied modern history. He became involved in student theatre through the Oxford University Dramatic Society (OUDS), and in his final year he served as president of the society. As OUDS president, Devine invited the actor John Gielgud to direct the society's 1932 production of Romeo and Juliet, which marked Gielgud's first experience directing a play. Peggy Ashcroft made her first appearance as Juliet in the production, and Devine himself performed the role of Mercutio. He also collaborated with other notable performers including Edith Evans during his OUDS activities. In April 1932, Devine left Oxford one term early without completing his finals or receiving a degree in order to pursue a professional career in theatre. He subsequently moved to London to begin his acting work.

Pre-war theatre career

Early acting roles and collaborations

Devine began his professional acting career in London shortly after leaving Oxford in 1932, where he quickly secured small acting jobs. He lived with the Motley design team—Sophie Harris, Margaret Harris, and Elizabeth Montgomery—and served as their business manager while pursuing acting opportunities. He obtained character roles at the Old Vic and appeared in several productions directed by John Gielgud during the 1930s. His early work included small parts that reflected the limited opportunities available to him as a young actor in the London theatre scene. In 1938, he played Sir Toby Belch in Michel Saint-Denis's production of Twelfth Night at the Phoenix Theatre. The following year, Devine appeared as Sir Toby Belch again in an early BBC television adaptation of Twelfth Night. Devine married Sophie Harris of the Motley team in 1939.

London Theatre Studio and initial directing

In 1936, George Devine co-founded the London Theatre Studio with French director Michel Saint-Denis and their colleagues Marius Goring and Glen Byam Shaw. The studio represented a pioneering effort in British drama training by offering instruction not only to actors and directors but also to stage designers, with the design course—overseen by the Motley design team (Sophie Harris, Margaret Harris, and Elizabeth Montgomery)—regarded as the first of its kind in Britain. Devine made his professional directing debut in 1939 with a stage adaptation of Charles Dickens's Great Expectations, scripted by Alec Guinness, at the Rudolf Steiner Hall in London. The production featured Alec Guinness as Herbert Pocket and Martita Hunt as Miss Havisham, and it reportedly exerted a significant influence on David Lean's 1946 film adaptation of the novel. In 1940, Devine directed a successful stage version of Daphne du Maurier's Rebecca at the Queen's Theatre. These early directing experiences marked the beginning of his professional work behind the scenes, though his career was interrupted by the outbreak of World War II and subsequent military service.

World War II service

Military enlistment and postings

George Devine served in the Royal Artillery during World War II, beginning his military training approximately a year after his marriage in 1939, with basic training occurring around 1940-1941. He was initially posted to India before transferring to Burma, where he participated in the Burma Campaign's jungle warfare for the final 18 months of the war. He attained the rank of captain while serving with the Royal Artillery in Burma and was twice mentioned in despatches for his contributions. His military service lasted approximately six years. While on active service, his daughter Harriet was born in September 1942; Devine was stationed in India at the time and did not meet her until she was a toddler. He returned to England in 1946 at the conclusion of his war service.

Post-war theatre work

Old Vic Theatre School and Young Vic

After returning from wartime service in 1946, George Devine co-founded the Old Vic Theatre School with Michel Saint-Denis and Glen Byam Shaw. The school formed part of the Old Vic Theatre Centre's post-war efforts to rebuild British theatre training and was planned from 1946 onward. Devine also established the Young Vic Theatre Company as an affiliated initiative dedicated to bringing professional theatre productions to young audiences while providing practical experience for emerging performers. The Old Vic Theatre School attracted and trained several actors who later achieved prominence, including Prunella Scales, who entered on a scholarship in 1949, Joan Plowright, who was among its pupils during its early years in the late 1940s, and Patrick Wymark, who attended between 1951 and 1953. These students benefited from the school's emphasis on ensemble-based training and classical repertoire in a period of reconstruction for British drama education. In 1952 Devine and his co-directors were forced to resign following a dispute with the Old Vic governors, after which the school's operations ended. This marked the conclusion of Devine's direct involvement in the Old Vic Theatre School and Young Vic initiatives.

Directing at Stratford and other venues

In the early 1950s, following the closure of the Old Vic Theatre School, George Devine worked as a freelance director and staged several Shakespeare productions at the Shakespeare Memorial Theatre in Stratford-upon-Avon. The most notable and controversial of these was his 1955 production of King Lear, starring John Gielgud in the title role, with Devine himself appearing as the Earl of Gloucester. Featuring sets and costumes by Japanese-American sculptor Isamu Noguchi, the staging adopted a stylised, non-historical approach intended to highlight the play's timeless and mythical qualities, free from decorative or period associations. Noguchi's abstract, oriental-inspired designs—including elements such as a mane and headpiece of horses' hair for Lear—rendered the production eccentric and astonishing to many observers, though Gielgud expressed reservations about certain costume details and requested adjustments for greater dignity in later scenes. It opened in Brighton in June 1955, toured extensively through European festivals and London, and concluded with a run at Stratford-upon-Avon from late November to mid-December 1955. Devine also directed several operas at Sadler's Wells Theatre in London during the same freelance period, contributing to the capital's opera repertoire.

English Stage Company and Royal Court Theatre

Founding and artistic directorship

In the mid-1950s, George Devine co-founded the English Stage Company with Tony Richardson and George Goetschius to champion contemporary drama and provide a dedicated venue for new writing. The company acquired the lease of the Royal Court Theatre in Sloane Square in 1956, establishing it as the permanent home for their ambitious programme. Devine served as the founding artistic director from 1956 until 1966, shaping the theatre into a writers' theatre committed to hard-hitting, uncompromising voices and a vital, modern theatre of experiment. His vision emphasised serious contemporary writing, artistic experimentation, and the inclusion of foreign plays, drawing on European modernism while also supporting revivals of classics and innovative new works. The company's policy aimed to present challenging drama ahead of public taste and give modern playwrights the stage they urgently needed. In January 1956, Devine placed a newspaper advertisement soliciting scripts from writers, resulting in over 700 submissions that highlighted the hunger for new work and the company's openness to fresh talent. This initiative reinforced the English Stage Company's founding objective to discover and nurture uncompromising writers dedicated to truth-seeking and innovative drama.

Key productions and playwright development

George Devine directed the inaugural production at the Royal Court Theatre, The Mulberry Bush by Angus Wilson, which opened in April 1956 as the English Stage Company's first offering in its new home. He also directed Arthur Miller's The Crucible later that year and appeared in it as Deputy-Governor Danforth. Under Devine's artistic directorship, the Royal Court staged John Osborne's Look Back in Anger in May 1956, directed by Tony Richardson; this production became a landmark in British theatre, heralding the "angry young men" movement and shifting focus toward contemporary social realism and new writing. Devine actively nurtured emerging playwrights by championing their work and providing a dedicated venue for experimentation, including Arnold Wesker, Ann Jellicoe, Edward Bond, Donald Howarth, and Keith Johnstone, whose plays helped define the Royal Court's reputation for bold, innovative drama. The theatre staged works by Eugène Ionesco, including The Chairs, contributing to the introduction of absurdist theatre to British audiences. Devine developed a significant relationship with Samuel Beckett and performed the role of Hamm in the 1958 production of Endgame. He mentored several notable directors, including William Gaskill, John Dexter, and Lindsay Anderson, who went on to shape British theatre in subsequent decades. Devine suffered a heart attack during preparations for A Patriot for Me in 1965–66.

Film and television acting credits

Notable screen appearances

George Devine appeared in a modest number of film and television productions, typically in supporting roles, while his primary career was devoted to theatre. His earliest notable screen work dates to 1939, when he played Sir Toby Belch in an early BBC television adaptation of Shakespeare's Twelfth Night. He also took on roles in other pre-war television productions that year, including Caliban in The Tempest. In the post-war period, Devine featured in several British films. He portrayed Peachum in Peter Brook's The Beggar's Opera (1953), followed by the Chop House Proprietor in Man with a Million (1954), Barnes the Editor in Joseph Losey's Time Without Pity (1957), and the Doctor in the 1959 film version of Look Back in Anger, a role created especially for him given his close association with the original stage production. One of his most prominent screen appearances came in 1963, when he played Squire Allworthy in Tony Richardson's acclaimed adaptation of Tom Jones. Devine also made guest appearances in British television anthology series during the 1950s and 1960s, including roles in ITV Play of the Week (1959–1960), BBC Sunday-Night Play (1960), and First Night (1964).

Personal life

Marriages and relationships

George Devine met Sophie Harris, a member of the Motley theatre design partnership also known as Audrey Sophia Harris, in 1932. After graduating from Oxford, he moved to London and lived with the Motley group, acting as their business manager while their personal relationship developed. The couple married on 27 October 1939. Their daughter, Harriet Devine, was born in September 1942. The marriage ended in the late 1950s. From the late 1950s until his death in 1966, Devine lived with the stage designer Jocelyn Herbert, with whom he shared a home at Rossetti Studios in Chelsea and later at Andrews Farm in Hampshire.

Health and later years

In his later years, George Devine faced significant health challenges, including a documented history of heart issues. In 1963, he suffered a breakdown accompanied by a heart attack. Despite these setbacks, Devine remained actively involved in theatre and took a performing role in John Osborne's A Patriot for Me at the Royal Court in 1965–66. While appearing in the production, he suffered a fatal heart attack. He died on 20 January 1966 in London at the age of 55.

Death and legacy

Final illness and passing

Devine's health declined in his later years, prompting his resignation as artistic director of the English Stage Company at the Royal Court Theatre in January 1965. Despite his ill health, he remained active in theatre and took a performing role in John Osborne's A Patriot for Me during its 1965 run at the Royal Court. He died in London on 20 January 1966 at the age of 55 following a heart attack. Devine was with his partner, the theatre designer Jocelyn Herbert, at the time of his death. His passing came after a period of sustained contribution to British theatre through the Royal Court, where he had championed new writing despite personal challenges.

Influence and honours

George Devine was a central figure in the renewal of post-war British theatre through his founding and artistic directorship of the English Stage Company at the Royal Court Theatre in 1956. He established the company to encourage new British playwrights and promote foreign drama, marking a widely recognised turning point that opened the stage to fresh voices and shifted British theatre away from its pre-war insularity. The premiere of John Osborne's Look Back in Anger that same year at the Royal Court became emblematic of this change, launching the "Angry Young Men" era and heralding a new wave of socially engaged drama. Devine championed emerging writers as a community endeavour, viewing theatre as a serious force for ideas and change rather than personal glamour, and his programming choices—such as Edward Bond's Saved in 1965—played a pivotal role in challenging and ultimately helping to abolish theatre censorship. Devine instilled enduring values at the Royal Court that emphasised the primacy of the text, clarity in direction and design, artistic ambition over careerism, and the essential "right to fail" as a prerequisite for innovation. He combined these principles with an unembarrassed seriousness about theatre's purpose, teaching self-respect to the art form and acting as an artistic conscience for subsequent generations of practitioners. His influence persists in the Royal Court's ongoing commitment to new writing and its tradition of text-focused, unostentatious production. For his contributions to British theatre, Devine was appointed a Commander of the Order of the British Empire (CBE) in 1958. In 1966, the George Devine Award for Most Promising Playwright was established as a memorial to his life and work, supporting emerging talent through an annual prize and recognising his lasting impact on playwright development.

References

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